Better liver transplant outcomes by donor interventions?

Autor: Hessheimer AJ; General & Digestive Surgery Service, Hospital Universitario La Paz, IdiPAZ, CIBERehd., Flores E; Transplant Coordination Unit, Hospital Universitario La Paz, Madrid, Spain., Vengohechea J; General & Digestive Surgery Service, Hospital Universitario La Paz, IdiPAZ, CIBERehd., Fondevila C; General & Digestive Surgery Service, Hospital Universitario La Paz, IdiPAZ, CIBERehd.
Jazyk: angličtina
Zdroj: Current opinion in organ transplantation [Curr Opin Organ Transplant] 2024 Aug 01; Vol. 29 (4), pp. 219-227. Date of Electronic Publication: 2024 May 24.
DOI: 10.1097/MOT.0000000000001153
Abstrakt: Purpose of Review: Donor risk factors and events surrounding donation impact the quantity and quality of grafts generated to meet liver transplant waitlist demands. Donor interventions represent an opportunity to mitigate injury and risk factors within donors themselves. The purpose of this review is to describe issues to address among donation after brain death, donation after circulatory determination of death, and living donors directly, for the sake of optimizing relevant outcomes among donors and recipients.
Recent Findings: Studies on donor management practices and high-level evidence supporting specific interventions are scarce. Nonetheless, for donation after brain death (DBD), critical care principles are employed to correct cardiocirculatory compromise, impaired tissue oxygenation and perfusion, and neurohormonal deficits. As well, certain treatments as well as marginally prolonging duration of brain death among otherwise stable donors may help improve posttransplant outcomes. In donation after circulatory determination of death (DCD), interventions are performed to limit warm ischemia and reverse its adverse effects. Finally, dietary and exercise programs have improved donation outcomes for both standard as well as overweight living donor (LD) candidates, while minimally invasive surgical techniques may offer improved outcomes among LD themselves.
Summary: Donor interventions represent means to improve liver transplant yield and outcomes of liver donors and grafts.
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Databáze: MEDLINE